Sunday, April 21, 2019

The Great Pararells of Passover

MENU CHANGE REGION CLOSE MENU Home About us ICEJ Aid Media Events Campaigns Store My Account Logout NEWS CONTACT DONATE LOGIN Search Home › THE GREAT PARALLELS OF PASSOVER 'For Christ our paschal lamb has been sacrificed' By:  Juha Ketola Posted on:  26 Feb 2013 (All day) The great theme of the Bible is the fall and sinful nature of humanity and then God’s provision of atonement and reconciliation for humankind through Christ, the Redeemer. Sin has separated us from God, but God’s gift in the resurrected Lord has brought us back near to Him. Temple sacrifices The purpose of the animal sacrifices and ordinances of service and worship to God in the Tabernacle of Moses in the desert, and later on in the Temple in Jerusalem, was to provide a way of escape for the Israelites from the wrath of God towards sin into His favour, protection, life and blessings. Again and again among the Israelites, humanity’s failures, imperfections and sins were transferred onto innocent animals to save and preserve human life. The guilty man had to bring an innocent animal to the priest, who then slaughtered it and let the man go free. The punishment for sin – death – was thus removed from upon the guilty person and transferred to the innocent animal, which by God’s command had to carry the consequences of humans breaking the holy law of God. The blood of the innocent animals was constantly covering the altar, for the Lord had said: “I have given it (the blood of the animal sacrifices) to you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood that makes atonement for the soul.” (Leviticus 17:11) The great warning of God had been: “If you sin, you will surely die.” However, men did sin, and death did have to take place – but it was the death of an innocent animal whose blood was poured out instead of the guilty man himself. When God saw the blood, it was always the sign for Him that His righteous requirements had been met, justice had been performed and the price for man’s iniquities had been paid. God was now free and just when placing His blessings and protection upon His righteous ones! The ultimate sacrifice The purpose of Temple service and the constant reading of the Holy Writings among the Israelites were also to teach and raise the expectancy in the hearts and minds of His holy people for the ultimate sacrifice to come. This ultimate sacrifice would be more than a blood covering for their sins, more than a reminder of their sins – it would take their sins away and their sin-consciousness would be changed into a consciousness of righteousness (Psalm 40:6-8, Hebrews 10:1-22)! This ultimate and final sacrifice would be the fulfilment of all the sacrifices in the Law of Moses, would be a once and for all sacrifice performed just once, and the place for it would be in the holy mountain of the Lord – in Jerusalem (Luke 13:33)!  “When I see the blood, I will pass over you.” (Exodus 12:13)  "Indeed Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us.” (1 Corinthians 5:7) The Lamb of God The true Lamb of God would arrive upon the scene and His name would be “Wonderful, Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace”. He would be called “Jesus” (Yeshua or “salvation” in Hebrew), for He would save His people from their sins (Isaiah 9:6, Matthew 1:21)! And Jesus, our Lord and Messiah, truly did come and gave himself as the ultimate sacrifice for his own people during the celebration of Passover. And not only for his own Jewish people but for the whole world… “Behold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.” (John 1:29) Passover The story in the whole Bible where the God of Israel has portrayed the power of the blood of Jesus in a narrative form – and concealed it from the notice of hardened hearts – is the historical exodus of the Israelites from Egypt. Every family in all Israel had to take a lamb – a lamb without blemish for each household – and then kill it at twilight (Exodus 12). The shed blood of the innocent lamb was then to be taken and put on the two doorposts and on the lintel of the houses. For the Lord had proclaimed: “When I see the blood, I will pass over you.” (Exodus 12:13) Every family living in the land of Egypt – both among the Egyptians and the Israelites alike – was in danger of having death enter into their household to rob their first-born sons. The judgment of God was about to fall on the land of Egypt because of their idol worship. We can read in the book of Ezekiel that the Israelites in Egypt also had fallen into the same snare and temptation of idol worship and thus death was about to fall upon their families alike (Ezekiel 20:7-10). But God provided a way of escape for His own people! The penalty of death and the judgment of God could be transferred from their families onto an innocent lamb slaughtered on their behalf. Someone had to die as the consequence of their sins. But this someone was not one of their own family – not the firstborn, not the father nor the mother – but a male lamb. The sins and resulting death of each Israelite family were transferred and laid upon the lamb, and the life and innocence of the lamb was transferred upon the family. The lamb died – and the family, including the firstborn, lived! When the angel of death was then passing through the land of Egypt destroying life among the Egyptian families, whenever he saw the lamb’s blood on the lintel and on the two doorposts of the Israelite families, he passed over. Death had already come! The destroyer then did not come into these houses to strike them a second time and the families inside were in complete safety! Only the Israelites had been told to act in this manner. The instructions for saving their lives had come through the mouth of Moses and they had heeded the word of the Lord – and they lived! The punishment for their idol worship and sins had been laid on the lamb and the families were forgiven because of the blood. This proved to be life-saving knowledge from God spoken through the mouth of Moses, who faithfully had delivered the word of God to them (Exodus 12:21). Then the elders and each family in turn had just as faithfully passed on the word from one family to another – and so the whole nation of Israel had been warned, instructed and as a result had been saved! Remember: “Indeed Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us.” Our death and hell was transferred onto him on the cross, and his life and righteousness was transferred upon us through his resurrection. When we believe, his life is in us and the life we live is his and we will never die! (Galatians 2:20, John 11:26) The Good News The message of the Passover lamb from Moses’ mouth spread among the hundreds of thousands of Israelites in two weeks’ time. The message of the Gospel of Jesus Christ who died on the cross as our Passover lamb has also been taken to millions of people and to the four corners of the earth in two thousand years! The truth about His death, burial and resurrection from the grave has been preached and believed on in the nations! Whoever believes and heeds this life-saving knowledge which was in the mouth of Jesus our Lord, surely shall be saved from eternal death, hell and destruction! Jesus says: “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.” (John 6:54) Life for your family There is a great Saviour and Redeemer, a Mediator between God and man – the man Christ Jesus! There is life, protection and blessing for your whole family – it is in his blood! Rev. Juha Ketola is an ordained minister who serves as International Director for the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem; www.icej.org AN ISRAEL ON THE RISE THE MIRACLE OF ISRAEL'S REBIRTH THE GREAT PARALLELS OF PASSOVER I WILL DO A NEW THING ‘NEW THINGS’ FOR ISRAEL AND THE CHURCH THE CONTROVERSY OVER ZION WAKE-UP CALL FOR AMERICA REMEMBERING THE EXODUS ICEJ STATEMENT ON UNESCO VOTE STATEMENT ON THE PASSING OF SHIMON PERES   Share this: Pray Join the Isaiah 62 Prayer Initiative Join Latest updates from Jerusalem Give Make a difference in Israel Latest News Israel Prepares for Passover and Good Friday IDF Requests NIS 10 Billion Budget Supplement Labor Party Reportedly Having Robust Internal Discussions Netanyahu Receives Majority Recommendation to Form Next Gov’t View All Follow us Privacy Contact The International Christian Embassy Jerusalem was founded in 1980 as an evangelical response for the need to comfort Zion according to the command of the scripture found in Isaiah 40:1-2; "Comfort, comfort my people says your God. 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Easter and Passover-Similarities and Differences

  Home » Calendars and Holy Days » Easter and Passover – Similarities and Differences Easter and Passover – Similarities and Differences   MARCH 14, 2018 CALENDARS AND HOLY DAYS Easter and Passover – Similarities and Differences (Originally published in the Classical Astronomy Update in 2008) As we saw in the last Update, the Christian observance of Easter was originally based on the Jewish Passover, and developed its own cultural distinctives over the centuries. This current month provides evidence of this divergence. April, 2008 roughly corresponds with the month of Nisan, 5768 in the Jewish calendar. Being a lunar calendar, the month Nisan begins at the first sighting of the waxing crescent Moon after its invisible conjunction with the Sun. Passover (Pesach) lands on 14 Nisan, which is the Full Moon of this month, 14 days afterwards. However, as we saw in the last Update, Easter (a.k.a. Pascha) landed on a very early date in late March. Someone asked me recently which is the “right” time to celebrate Pesach/Pascha. Unfortunately, the LORD does not give clear astronomical guidelines in Scripture, and if He did, it would settle the differences of opinion on the matter. Here is what the Torah has to say: Thou shalt keep the feast of unleavened bread: (thou shalt eat unleavened bread seven days, as I commanded thee, in the time appointed of the month Abib; for in it thou camest out from Egypt: and none shall appear before me empty:) – Exodus 23:15 The feast of unleavened bread shalt thou keep. Seven days thou shalt eat unleavened bread, as I commanded thee, in the time of the month Abib: for in the month Abib thou camest out from Egypt. – Exodus 34:18 Observe the month of Abib, and keep the passover unto the LORD thy God: for in the month of Abib the LORD thy God brought thee forth out of Egypt by night. – Deuteronomy 16:1 My concordance identifies the month of Abib with “the first month of the year,” indicating springtime since the word means “sprouting” or “budding.” If only Scripture would nail down exactly how that should be determined! The passage of the seasons is linked to the annual cycle of the Sun. However, the Hebrew feasts are reckoned by the monthly cycles of the Moon. The timing of Easter is related to the Full Moon and also the Sun’s vernal equinox. Meanwhile, the modern Hebrew calendar is based on the 19 year cycle of the Sun and Moon, which keeps the lunar months on track with the seasons. This means that every so often, you need to throw in an extra month. This happened here in 2008, when Easter landed in the Jewish month of “second Adar,” which only happens every few years. Arguably, Easter, 2008 was closer to the “first month” than Passover, 5768. However, the Hebrew calendar, even with its extra intercalary months, is necessary to make tables and to keep long term lunar timekeeping in step with the seasons. In comparison, a strict twelve-month lunar calendar is maintained in Islam. But since it is only 354 days long, the Islamic calendar drifts along through the seasons over a span of decades. Perhaps this isn’t an issue in the arid lands of Arabia, but it would be a big matter for Pesach/Pascha, which must fall within the time of “sprouting” or “budding.” In my opinion, if the LORD intended there to be a “right” time for finding the time of Passover, He would either have given Moses more explicit instructions, or else he would have made the Sun and Moon to agree more closely. In any case, the LORD has made provision in these astronomical discrepancies, as they have given astronomers an opportunity to study the sky in detail, and a great many useful things have been learned in the process. The Church Calendar and the Jewish Calendar As we’ve seen in other Updates, the traditional Christian ecclessiastical calendar does include a cycle of “moveable feasts” that correspond to certain Hebrew feasts. But rather than commemorate events in the history of Israel, the church calendar remembers events in the New Testament. Easter is preceded by Lent, a 40-day period of reflection and repentance beginning on Ash Wednesday, and corresponds with Jesus’ 40 days in the desert, as recorded in Matthew 4:2, Mark 1:13, and Luke 4:2. But Easter itself is not simply a one-day feast. Easter Sunday is traditionally the beginning of a 40-day period of “Eastertide,” which commemorates the 40 days that Jesus appeared to His disciples after the Resurrection, as recorded in Acts 1:3: To whom also he shewed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God: Eastertide ends on Ascension Thursday, 40 days after Easter Sunday, which commemorates when the LORD ascended into heaven. The Easter cycle finally ends on Pentecost, which is 50 days after Easter Sunday. Pentecost is remembered as the “birthday of the church,” when the Holy Spirit came down upon the Apostles and moved Peter to preach, leading 3000 souls to Christ, as we read in Acts 2. In this way, the traditional church calendar devotes nearly three months to the passion and glorification of Christ. The feast of Pentecost corresponds to the Hebrew Shavuot, or the Feast of Weeks, as instructed in Leviticus and Deuteronomy: And ye shall count unto you from the morrow after the sabbath, from the day that ye brought the sheaf of the wave offering; seven sabbaths shall be complete: Even unto the morrow after the seventh sabbath shall ye number fifty days; and ye shall offer a new meat offering unto the LORD. – Leviticus 23, 15-16 Seven weeks shalt thou number unto thee: begin to number the seven weeks from such time as thou beginnest to put the sickle to the corn. And thou shalt keep the feast of weeks unto the LORD thy God with a tribute of a freewill offering of thine hand, which thou shalt give unto the LORD thy God, according as the LORD thy God hath blessed thee: – Deuteronomy 16:9-10 Shavuot commemorates the day when Moses brought the Torah down to Israel from Mount Sinai, representing the Old Covenant. The Christian feast of Pentecost remembers the day the Holy Spirit was poured out, signifying the New Covenant. Israel became a nation 50 days after the Passover lamb was killed, and the church was established 50 days after the paschal sacrifice of Jesus. Ascension Thursday is on May 1, 2008. Pentecost (or Whit Sunday) is on May 11 this year. Though most evangelicals do not follow the ecclesiastical calendar, it’s nevertheless interesting to understand what it is meant to represent. BOOKMARK THE PERMALINK. « The Paschal Moon The Design of the Sky – Orion’s Belt » SHARE ON SOCIAL MEDIA http://classicalastronomy.com/2018/03/easter-and-passover-similarities-and-differences"> SEARCH Search for: Search ARTICLE TOPICS "Pagan Influences"? Astro-Facts NASA and the Planets Astronomy of Holidays Blog Calendars and Holy Days Comets Fun Stuff Meteor Showers Moon Lunar Cycles Lunar Eclipse "Blood Moons"??? 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How the Passover Illuminates the Date of the Crucifixion

Menu Dig up the Truth with Bible and Spade magazine » Search How the Passover Illuminates the Date of the Crucifixion Technical - Feb 28, 2018 - by Rick Lanser MDiv Share/recommend this article: EXCERPT I have found that a close study of the term “Passover” and matters related to it profoundly illustrates how intricately the Lord God has tied together the books of the Bible, where one part far removed from another explains and illuminates an obscure detail elsewhere that is otherwise almost inscrutable... Continue reading EXPLORE Related Articles Please Stand With Us: UPDATE! As many of you will recall we sent out an urgent appeal just 2 weeks ago that ABR was in need of an ... October 2016 Ministry Update and Appeal Letter Here are some highlights of ABR’s ministry, including some of the important ministry developments an... Golgotha: A Reconsideration of the Evidence for the Sites of Jesus’ Crucifixion and Burial Currently, the most popular alternative site to traditional Golgotha, located in the Church of the H... Tags Crucifixion Passover Eschatology Exegesis Daniel 9 SUPPORT Like this artice? Our Ministry relies on the generosity of people like you. Every small donation helps us develop and publish great articles. Please support ABR! In August 2017, I undertook a wide-ranging study of various aspects of biblical chronology and eschatology. This study, now referred to as the Daniel 9:24-27 Project because seeking to understand those verses got me started, was motivated by my desire to settle, to my satisfaction alone, exactly what God had revealed in Scripture about end-times matters. Because I attended seminary back in the 1980s, I am quite aware that this area of study has generated a lot of opinions and discussion! Very significant “isms” of the evangelical world—premillenialism, amillenialism, postmillennialism, and various shades of these—find their origin in differences in how the books of Daniel and Revelation are understood. Since so many books and Internet websites have undertaken to promote the views of their authors on these matters, not all of whom are equally determined to let the written Word of God have the last word, I decided to do my own from-scratch research with nothing but an open Bible in front of me. Taking on this project has had a real impact on my life. The continual exposure to the Word it requires has deepened my prayer life, strengthened my faith, and awed me as I have seen, again and again, how every “jot and tittle” of the biblical text reflects the inspiration of the Holy Spirit behind it. Timelines started in one book, touched on in another, and finished in yet another all tie seamlessly together. Surely this would not have been possible without the Living God acting behind the scenes to bring His Word into the world through a variety of people from different times and backgrounds. But others over the years have said as much, and merely repeating this observation does little to edify others. Specific examples are needed. Therefore, in this article I will look at a few from my ongoing research that illustrate the faith-encouraging, deep interconnections among different passages of Scripture. They shed light on one another in the same way that a gifted human author gradually develops a plot line that deepens and grows in complexity as the chapters pass. Given the daunting task I set for myself, to try to understand the full range of eschatology-related topics covered in Scripture, there are many subjects I could tackle! In this study I will share just a very narrow slice of my research, a part that ties in with determining the date of the Crucifixion. I have found that a close study of the term “Passover” and matters related to it profoundly illustrates how intricately the Lord God has tied together the books of the Bible, where one part far removed from another explains and illuminates an obscure detail elsewhere that is otherwise almost inscrutable. My larger goal is for the study to clarify how part of the prophecy in Daniel 9:24-27 has already been exactly fulfilled in history, and then, God willing, to go on to a consideration of aspects which still remain to be unveiled as the time of the Messiah's return gets closer. Much Ado Over Eclipses The need for brevity here prevents undertaking a comprehensive overview of the options for the date of the Crucifixion, so let us focus on just differentiating between the two main candidates: April 7, 30 AD or April 3, 33 AD. We will restrict our examination to these two dates because they are the only ones between 29 and 36 AD when the Passover began on a Friday evening (dates as assigned by Finegan, Handbook of Biblical Chronology, Table 179): Monday, April 18, 29 AD Friday, April 7, 30 AD Tuesday, March 27, 31 AD Monday, April 14, 32 AD Friday, April 3, 33 AD* Wednesday, March 24, 34 AD Tuesday, April 12, 35 AD Saturday, March 31, 36 AD * It should be noted that the chart at http://www.judaismvschristianity.com/passover_dates.htm​, claiming to use U.S. Naval Observatory data, gives the date of Nisan 14 in 33 AD as Saturday, April 4. I use Finegan for the purposes of this paper because he is widely regarded as authoritative, and his date was accepted by Humphreys and Waddington. Should Finegan’s date be shown to be wrong, this study will need to be revisited. The April 3, 33 AD date has received a lot of good press in recent years, but this has been due less to careful exegesis than to the popularizing of a lunar eclipse study by Colin Humphreys and W.G. Waddington in 1983, a study developed further in their 1985 paper, “The Date of the Crucifixion” (JASA 37, pp. 2-10, online at http://www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1985/JASA3-85Humphreys.html​). That study concluded there was a “blood moon” that day, which they tied in with the Joel 2 prophecy quoted by Peter on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2:17-21). Since NASA calculated that there was a lunar eclipse on Friday, April 3, 33 AD, but not on any other candidate for the Crucifixion date, the authors claim only that date works. But there is a fly in the ointment. Since NASA’s research, showing that there was indeed a lunar eclipse that day, is taken as completely solid and provides the starting point for their study, shouldn’t the related research of particular scientists working for NASA be regarded likewise? NASA scientist Bradley Schaefer studied the question of the visibility of the eclipse on April 3, 33 AD, and arrived at conclusions that do not reinforce the case Humphreys and Waddington have promoted. Schaefer and his work have thus been consigned to the doghouse by all who have taken the Humphreys and Waddington analysis to heart. Schaefer, in a technically sound peer-reviewed paper with a lot of math that is far over my head, came to the conclusion that the lunar eclipse of April 3, 33 AD would have been barely noticeable on the horizon just as the moon rose that evening, with a normal full moon gracing the sky through the heart of the night. That day in Jerusalem, he said, the eclipse at twilight would have been partial, at most briefly occluding no more than 59% of the disk of the full moon, such that the leakage of light from the unshadowed part of the moon that night would have washed out any “blood moon” phenomenon (Schaefer, Lunar Visibility and the Crucifixion, p. 59, online at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1990QJRAS..31...53S​). As he put it, it would have been like trying to notice an “8 watt red light bulb next to a megawatt searchlight” (Schaefer, p.65). That is a quite graphic description of the difficulty in seeing this eclipse. He also observed that the eclipsed moon could only be noticed by the naked eye when it was at least 3.4 degrees above the horizon, and by that time the darkest umbral shadow would have completely left the moon, or occluded less than 1% of the lunar disk (Schaefer, p. 64). Some defenders of Humphreys and Waddington have objected that Schaefer failed to take into account “triple refraction” of the lunar light through the atmosphere, which would have lengthened, and thus reddened, the wavelengths of the light, and theoretically approximated a “blood moon.” At first glance that argument seemed to carry some weight, but then I thought: If the light being refracted through the atmosphere was mainly from the “searchlight” of the 41% unoccluded part of the full moon, the net effect would still have been just the normal amber coloration of the rising moon, nothing out of the ordinary. It also struck me that it was rather difficult to imagine a qualified NASA scientist, whose specialty was analyzing lunar phenomena, would have forgotten to fully account for atmospheric refraction in his peer-reviewed paper. How likely is that? (And this is assuming, for argument’s sake, that Schaefer was wrong in his calculations that the umbral occlusion of the moon would have essentially ended before it was high enough in the sky to be noticed.) For these reasons, I am inclined to dismiss the lunar eclipse argument as having any significance in determining the day of the Crucifixion. But what about Peter’s quote of the prophet Joel? Surely that has a bearing on whether there was a blood moon, science be hanged? The quote in full reads (ESV): And in the last days it shall be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams; even on my male servants and female servants in those days I will pour out my Spirit, and they shall prophesy. And I will show wonders in the heavens above and signs on the earth below, blood, and fire, and vapor of smoke; the sun shall be turned to darkness and the moon to blood, before the day of the Lord comes, the great and magnificent day. And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. (Acts 2:17-21, quoting Joel 2:28-32a) Was Peter’s quote from Joel 2, which he said was a fulfillment of what the crowd was hearing that day (i.e., the hubbub of speaking in foreign languages issuing from the house where the disciples had gathered), indeed focused just as strongly on the “moon shall be turned to blood” aspect (as Humphreys and Waddington assume) as on the “pouring out my Spirit” part? For this to be true, “the moon to blood” would have to apply not to what was being heard that Pentecost day (the issue Peter was directly addressing), but to a partial eclipse “blood moon” supposedly briefly seen 50 days previously—after Jesus was already in the tomb and people had largely dispersed to their homes, and by arguably an entirely different group of people than on Pentecost—rather than to the cacophony of sound his audience was wondering about. Every interpreter of Scripture will have to make up their own mind how likely this was. For my part, accounting for what Dr. Schaefer wrote about how minimal the eclipse’s visual impact at Jerusalem probably was and my perception that his analysis is scientifically reliable, I think it is quite acceptable exegesis to view the mention of the “blood moon” as a yet-unfulfilled part of the Joel prophecy that did not apply to the situation at hand. It happened to be part of the larger context of the quote and for that reason was included, notwithstanding that it was not directly applicable to the Pentecost situation, because Peter wanted to get past it to the important, and very applicable, challenge the prophet closed with: “everyone who calls upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.” What Do the Scriptures Say? At any rate, for now I want to set aside the whole eclipse debate and look to the Word alone. Does it tell us anything that helps us choose between April 7, 30 AD and April 3, 33 AD for the date of the Crucifixion? I believe it does, but it is not immediately obvious. We first have to go back to the Old Testament to see how God set up the first Passover, then how the Jews subsequently celebrated it. There are four important passages we need to look at. Exodus 12 Our first passage records the inception of the Passover, on the night when the angel of the Lord struck down all of the first-born in the land of Egypt, but “passed over” and spared the Israelites with the blood of a lamb on their doorposts. Exodus 12 records the story (ESV): This month shall be for you the beginning of months. It shall be the first month of the year for you. Tell all the congregation of Israel that on the tenth day of this month every man shall take a lamb according to their fathers' houses, a lamb for a household….Your lamb shall be without blemish, a male a year old. You may take it from the sheep or from the goats, and you shall keep it until the fourteenth day of this month, when the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill their lambs at twilight….They shall eat the flesh that night, roasted on the fire; with unleavened bread and bitter herbs they shall eat it. And you shall let none of it remain until the morning; anything that remains until the morning you shall burn….It is the LORD's Passover (Ex. 12:2-11, emphasis added). The takeaways here are that on the first month of the Jewish religious year, which is called Nisan, on the fourteenth day of the month as that day begins at twilight (the Jewish day begins around 6 pm in the evening), the Passover lamb was to be killed. It was kept in the household from Nisan 10 until Nisan 14 began, so the slaughtering of the lamb was just after the onset of Nisan 14. Then, that same evening of the start of Nisan 14, the lamb was to be eaten as part of a meal that included unleavened bread. Remember that according to Scripture, the lamb was both killed and eaten on Nisan 14. It was not killed ahead of time on Nisan 13 for eating on Nisan 14, nor was it killed on Nisan 14 and then eaten on Nisan 15. In fact, such carrying over of the Passover meal to another day was expressly forbidden: “you shall let none of it remain until the morning.” These words tell us that the meal was eaten before the daylight portion of Nisan 14 dawned. Moreover, it was a meal involving the eating of unleavened bread, a detail having a bearing on understanding other matters later. Leviticus 23 Next, consider this information gleaned from Leviticus 23: These are the appointed feasts of the LORD, the holy convocations, which you shall proclaim at the time appointed for them. In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at twilight, is the LORD's Passover. And on the fifteenth day of the same month is the Feast of Unleavened Bread to the LORD; for seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the first day you shall have a holy convocation; you shall not do any ordinary work….On the seventh day is a holy convocation; you shall not do any ordinary work (Lev. 23:4-8). Numbers 28 Numbers 28 is similar, for brevity we will leave out the details about the sacrifices: On the fourteenth day of the first month is the LORD's Passover, and on the fifteenth day of this month is a feast. Seven days shall unleavened bread be eaten. On the first day there shall be a holy convocation. You shall not do any ordinary work….And on the seventh day you shall have a holy convocation. You shall not do any ordinary work (Num. 28:16-18, 25). These two passages establish some additional facts for us. One we already learned from Exodus 12: that Nisan 14 was the assigned day of “the LORD’s Passover,” which specifically referred to the day of the Passover seder—the meal of the lamb sacrificed at twilight as that day began and eaten with unleavened bread. To this we add an additional fact, the next day—Nisan 15—would be the start of the seven-day Feast of Unleavened Bread. Even though “the LORD’s Passover,” the seder meal of Nisan 14, was also a day of eating unleavened bread (see Exodus 12 above) similar to the seven days of the Feast, the inclusion of the Pachal Lamb in the meal on Nisan 14 set it apart as separate from the rest of the Feast. Thus, Nisan 14 was a day of unleavened bread, but it was not technically part of the Feast of Unleavened Bread that starts on Nisan 15. The expressions “days of unleavened bread” or just “unleavened bread,” unmodified by the words “Feast of,” were the way the Jews joined Nisan 14 and 15 as two parts of a single, larger festival period called simply “the Passover.” Used that way, it referred to an eight-day period. This is an important point to keep in mind when we look at the Passover in the New Testament. Also observe, this Feast of Unleavened Bread would begin and end with a “holy convocation” on which work was not to be done. In other words, two special Sabbaths bookended this Feast, known as “high” Sabbaths because the festivals were known as “high days.” Unlike the normal weekly Sabbath that was always observed on the seventh day of the week (Saturday), such high Sabbaths could land on any day of the week. This was because the dates of the month Nisan were determined via a lunar calendar, such that Nisan 15 landed on different days of the week in different years. 2 Chronicles 35 Finally, 2 Chronicles 35 gives us insight into the way the Jews practiced the Passover seder (the meal of the lamb, unleavened bread and bitter herbs eaten on Nisan 14): Josiah kept a Passover to the LORD in Jerusalem. And they slaughtered the Passover lamb on the fourteenth day of the first month….And they roasted the Passover lamb with fire according to the rule; and they boiled the holy offerings in pots, in cauldrons, and in pans, and carried them quickly to all the lay people….So all the service of the LORD was prepared that day, to keep the Passover and to offer burnt offerings on the altar of the LORD, according to the command of King Josiah (2 Chron 35:1, 13, 16). This passage makes clear that the Jews in Josiah’s day understood Exodus 12:2-11 as teaching that both the killing and the eating of the Passover lamb were to take place on Nisan 14. Why am I emphasizing these things? Because they are not so crystal clear when we see how things are written up in the Gospels. It appears God deliberately hid these bits of background information about the Passover deep in obscure places of the Old Testament so that only people motivated to know His truth would find it. The Passover in the Gospels Now, what is so confusing in the Gospels? Basically, there are multiple ways the term “Passover” can be understood, and apart from the OT background above it is a murky business. It sometimes refers only to the Passover seder meal day of Nisan 14 when the lamb was sacrificed, while in other places it combines Nisan 14 together with the days of the Feast beginning on Nisan 15 and emphasizes their common focus on eating unleavened bread. When understood broadly this way, the general terms “Unleavened Bread” or “days of Unleavened Bread” are used. The rule is, if the time period is called “the Feast of Unleavened Bread,” it refers only to the seven days beginning on Nisan 15. Let us now look at the events surrounding the day Christ died with these insights, beginning with Matthew. Matthew 27 Now on the first day of Unleavened Bread the disciples came to Jesus, saying, “Where will you have us prepare for you to eat the Passover?” He said, “Go into the city to a certain man and say to him, ‘The Teacher says, My time is at hand. I will keep the Passover at your house with my disciples.’” And the disciples did as Jesus had directed them, and they prepared the Passover (Mt. 26:17-19). Observe the mention of “the first day of Unleavened Bread.” This is not specifically the Feast of Unleavened Bread lasting seven days beginning on Nisan 15, but the first of eight days in which unleavened bread is to be eaten. Thus, the day in question is Nisan 14, the day for the Passover seder meal. That this is the proper understanding is confirmed by the words “prepare…to eat.” They refer to slaughtering the lamb just as Nisan 14 begins at evening, and along with it preparing the unleavened bread and bitter herbs which are part and parcel with the meal as laid out in Exodus 12. Mark 14 On the first day of Unleavened Bread, when the Passover lamb was being sacrificed [i.e., on Nisan 14], His disciples said to Him, “Where do You want us to go and prepare for You to eat the Passover?” “…go into the city, and a man will meet you carrying a pitcher of water; follow him; and wherever he enters, say to the owner of the house, ‘The Teacher says, “Where is My guest room in which I may eat the Passover with My disciples?’ And he himself will show you a large upper room furnished and ready; prepare for us there.” The disciples went out and came to the city, and found it just as He had told them; and they prepared the Passover (Mk. 14:12-16). These verses do not include the Greek word for “feast,” heortē, as in Luke 22:1 below (“Now the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which is called the Passover, was approaching”). As noted earlier, the truncated expression, “Unleavened Bread” without “the feast of,” is the broad use described in Exodus 12:18 that includes the Passover seder meal of Nisan 14 (“In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at evening, you shall eat unleavened bread, until the twenty-first day of the month at evening”). Therefore, “first day” as used here refers to Nisan 14, not to the first day of the strictly-defined (in Exodus 12, Numbers 28 and Leviticus 23) Feast of Unleavened Bread that starts on Nisan 15. The focus of Mark 14:12 is not on the festival as a whole, but specifically on the group meal of the Paschal Lamb along with unleavened bread. Since the room was already “furnished and ready,” the only preparing needed was the meal. Peter and John (see Luke 22) could handle the slaughtering of the lamb and cooking everything just between the two of them. Luke 22 Now the Feast of Unleavened Bread drew near, which is called the Passover….Then came the day of Unleavened Bread, on which the Passover lamb had to be sacrificed. So Jesus sent Peter and John, saying, “Go and prepare the Passover for us, that we may eat it.” They said to him, “Where will you have us prepare it?” He said to them, “Behold, when you have entered the city, a man carrying a jar of water will meet you. Follow him into the house that he enters and tell the master of the house, ‘The Teacher says to you, Where is the guest room, where I may eat the Passover with my disciples?’ And he will show you a large upper room furnished; prepare it there.” And they went and found it just as he had told them, and they prepared the Passover (Lk. 22:1, 7-13). The emphasized words give the keys to understanding this passage, which corresponds perfectly with what Matthew and Mark reported. Luke begins by talking about the formally-defined Feast of Unleavened Bread held from Nisan 15-21 inclusive, then his focus switches to Nisan 14, the day the Passover lamb was slaughtered and on which unleavened bread was eaten for the first time as part of the complex of Passover-related events. “Prepare the Passover for us, that we may eat it” means just what it says—kill the lamb as Nisan 14 begins and also bake the unleavened bread, so the meal can be eaten. John 13 Now before the Feast of the Passover, when Jesus knew that his hour had come to depart out of this world to the Father, having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end. During supper, when the devil had already put it into the heart of Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, to betray him…(John 13:1-2). Here we have the expression, “Feast of the Passover.” “Feast of” should be understood as a technical term, marking this as a mention of the Feast of Unleavened Bread starting on Nisan 15, of which the Passover seder meal on Nisan 14 was part of the whole complex of events. Since the verse continues with mentions of the “hour” of His departure (the Crucifixion), the reference to “during supper,” and the betrayal of Judas which we know took place in the wee hours of the night on Nisan 14, the supper mentioned must be one and the same as the Passover seder described in the other Gospels. The Proper Place for Typology: The “Last Supper” Question The words “during supper” in John 13 brings us to another matter that should be discussed. Some have proposed that the “Last Supper” was a different meal than the Passover seder (notwithstanding that Scripture knows nothing of the expression “Last Supper”; the term is entirely a human invention). The idea that there might have been a “Last Supper,” a meal separate and different from the Passover seder, arises from the mistaken perception that this meal was prepared on Nisan 13 and eaten on Nisan 14, but the sacrifice of the Paschal lamb took place around 3 pm on Nisan 14 and was actually eaten on Nisan 15. By this understanding, and with a very rigid view of the typology of Christ as the Passover Lamb, it is said that the type/antitype relationship breaks down if Christ did not die at the exact same time as the Passover lambs. But we have already seen above that Old Testament passages indicate that on the original Passover, the lambs were slaughtered and prepared as Nisan 14 was just beginning, on the heels of Nisan 13 in the early evening, not at 3 pm in the afternoon of Nisan 14. It is not as if the Passover typology breaks down, for we have seen the OT teaching is that the lambs were sacrificed on Nisan 14, the same day that Jesus suffered and died. I am indebted to Keith Hunt (​http://www.keithhunt.com/passover5.html​) for pointing out several areas where typology cannot be pushed too far in equating the sacrifice of the Paschal Lamb at the seder meal with the sacrificial death of Christ, “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world”: 1. Jesus' blood was spilled at the cross, outside the city of Jerusalem, not in a house, as was the Passover lamb (Ex. 12:7 with the last chapters of the gospels). 2. The Passover lamb was slain by having its throat cut (the usual way to kill a sacrificial lamb or goat in Israel). Jesus was not slain in this manner as the gospels make plain. 3. Jesus' blood was not used in any specific way, it fell to the ground. The blood of the Passover lamb of Exodus 12 was used in a specific way (verse 7). 4. The lamb of Ex. 12 was roasted with fire (verse 8, 9).  Jesus was not killed by being burnt at the stake, but was crucified on a cross (see the gospels). 5. Nothing of the Passover lamb was to remain. That which was left over was to be burnt by fire (verse 10). The Messiah's body was not to see corruption (Ps. 16:10). 6. Jesus was beaten, bruised, buffeted, spit upon, and scourged, so He was greatly marred (Isa. 52:13, 14; 53:5, 7, 10). The Passover lamb was not treated this way before it was sacrificed in death. 7. Jesus was killed along with others (two others to be specific as the gospels show) - Isa. 53:12. The Passover lamb was the only one killed on the 14th for the Passover service and meal. The lamb of Ex.12 was not killed with one or more lambs during that service. There was one lamb killed for each group, not two or three. 8.  So severely beat (sic) was Jesus that it was foretold: “I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint....” (Ps. 22:14). This did not happen to the literal physical Passover lamb. 9.  Jesus was betrayed for thirty pieces of silver (Zech. 11:12, 13; Mt. 26:14-16; 27:3-10). Nothing of this typology was done with the Passover lamb of Exodus 12. It is possible to push the search for analogies too far. We have repeatedly seen above that the meal to be eaten is plainly called “the Passover” in the Gospels, and we should not use humanly-devised typology relationships to say that the plain sense of the biblical text is misleading and a different “Last Supper” is meant. I want to close this part of the study with one more quote from the amazingly lucid Keith Hunt, recorded at http://www.keithhunt.com/passover6.html​: Typology is good. Typology is used by God, but typology like some aspect of parables, BREAKS DOWN at points and is not necessarily meant to be carried over into the hundredth degree of everything stated or given. The Passover lamb was slain and died at the BEGINNING of the 14th day. Jesus died towards the END of the 14th day. Was Christ to die at the beginning of the 14th like the Passover lamb did? No! There is NO SCRIPTURE in Exodus 12 that dogmatically asserts the Messiah was to die at the beginning of the 14th, just as there is no scripture to say He was to be put to death by being burnt at the stake, or roasted, as was the Passover lamb. Typology is good if you use it CORRECTLY! It is like what Paul said about the law. “But we know that the law is good, IF a man use it lawfully” (1 Tim. 1:8). Typology is also good IF you use it typologically lawfully and correctly! Clearing Up Confusion in the Gospel of John Returning to the Gospel accounts, we now look at some confusing passages in John: Then they led Jesus from the house of Caiaphas to the governor’s headquarters. It was early morning. They themselves did not enter the governor’s headquarters, so that they would not be defiled, but could eat the Passover (Jn. 18:28). Since it takes place later on Nisan 14 after the Passover seder had already been eaten by all the Jews just after the close of Nisan 13 (following the prescriptions in Exodus, Leviticus, etc.), this verse must refer to the remaining festival meals of unleavened bread still to come, beginning with the high Sabbath meal of the coming evening, Nisan 15. There is no conflict here; “the Passover” in this verse refers to the entire Feast of Unleavened Bread, precisely as Luke 22:1 defined it: “Now the Feast of Unleavened Bread drew near, which is called the Passover.” Now it was the day of Preparation of the Passover. It was about the sixth hour. He said to the Jews, “Behold your King!” (Jn. 19:14). Since “day of preparation” consistently refers to the day before a Sabbath to get ready for it, that is how the expression should be understood here. John later (19:31, see below) mentions that the Sabbath in question was a “high” Sabbath. This means it was the Nisan 15 Sabbath connected with the Feast of Unleavened Bread. So this reference is not to slaughtering the Passover lamb and cooking the seder meal (which had already been done the evening before), but to getting ready for the upcoming high Sabbath that was part of the Passover-related festivities. The Day of Preparation At this point an observation on another source of potential confusion is called for: the words “prepare” and “day of preparation.” Whenever we find “day of preparation” mentioned in the Gospels, it refers to getting ready on the day before a Sabbath. The term has nothing to do with the day for slaughtering and cooking the Passover lamb, but to the day before a Sabbath. In the Old Testament, the Jews were instructed in the wilderness to gather manna each day, but not on the Sabbath, when no work was to be done. They were to prepare for the Sabbath by collecting on Friday a double supply of manna sufficient to cover the regular Sabbath as well. There was extra work to be done that day to get ready for the day when no work could be done. We need to beware lest we confuse preparing the Passover seder to eat with the “day of preparation.” The two things were quite distinct, and context makes it clear which is which. The Jewish Use of Inclusive Dating Apart from the question of whether there was a “day of preparation” preceding a Nisan 15 high Sabbath that did not land on a Saturday, it is theoretically possible for two Sabbaths to occur between Nisan 14 and the “first day of the week” when the Resurrection took place. This has been the crux of the debate between which date to choose for the Crucifixion. Sabbatarian calendars on the Internet, for example http://www.marieslibrary.com/PDF_Articles/JesusCalendar30AD.pdf, place the Passover of 30 AD on Wednesday, April 5 rather than the usual Friday, April 7. By their reckoning, Thursday (Nisan 15) was the start of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, a high Sabbath of no work. Then Friday, Nisan 16, was the day of preparation for the regular Sabbath, on which it is supposed the women "bought" (purchased in the market) spices to anoint Jesus, but did nothing else. They just went to the market, purchased supplies, then went home to wait until the rest of that day and the Sabbath the followed it were over. Then the next day, Nisan 17, was the regular Saturday Sabbath, with the Lord rising from the dead during the early hours of Nisan 18, which would have been Sunday, April 9. But isn’t that Wednesday-to-Sunday period too much time? Not by the calculations used by sabbatarian groups. They hold that Matthew 12:40 takes care of the problem: “For just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.” Many, if not most, modern Americans would understand this passage, if read in isolation, as speaking of the passing of three full days—i.e., 72 hours. By tying this way of understanding Mt. 12:40 in with the idea of two Sabbaths between Wednesday and Sunday, a seemingly reasonable case can be made for the Crucifixion taking place in 30 AD, with the empty tomb being discovered the first day of the week. This superficially seems to work. Except, a closer look shows it does not. We still have to deal with the matter of inclusive dating. Inclusive dating simply means that a measured period of time is reckoned to include the day the counting begins from. Consider, for example, the time covered by the Feast of Unleavened Bread. One Sabbath—the first day of the feast—is on Nisan 15. Using inclusive counting, Nisan 15 is also the first day of the Feast, making Nisan 21 the final, seventh day of the Feast. Other considerations also show the Jews used inclusive counting. The apostle Paul wrote: For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures…(1 Cor. 15:3-4). He was raised on the third day. What day of the week was that? We have multiple Scriptures that unanimously declare it was “early on the first day of the week”: And very early on the first day of the week, when the sun had risen, they went to the tomb (Mk. 16:2). But on the first day of the week, at early dawn, they went to the tomb, taking the spices they had prepared (Lk. 24:1). Now on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene came to the tomb early, while it was still dark, and saw that the stone had been taken away from the tomb (Jn. 20:1). The only way we can connect the first day of the week, Sunday, with the third day of entombment of Jesus’ body, is if Saturday (the regular Sabbath) was the second day of entombment, and Friday (Nisan 14) was the first day of the three-day count. This means the Resurrection took place early in the morning of a Sunday, Nisan 16. But what about John 19:31? This verse tells us, Since it was the day of Preparation, and so that the bodies would not remain on the cross on the Sabbath (for that Sabbath was a high day), the Jews asked Pilate that their legs might be broken and that they might be taken away. On the surface this seems to complicate matters, seemingly indicating that the Sabbath in question was not the regular Saturday Sabbath of 33 AD, but the special Sabbath of Nisan 15 in 30 AD. But when we look closely at the calendar of 33 AD and understand that the Jews counted days inclusively, such that the “three days and three nights” of Mt.  12:40 was a Jewish idiom that in no way sets aside the inclusive counting norm, we see something fascinating: in the year 33 AD, the high Sabbath mandated by the Feast of Unleavened Bread landed on Saturday—the same day as the regular Sabbath! This allows John 19:31 to stand as written, “that Sabbath was a high day,” and not conflict in any way with inclusive counting back from the first day of the week that places the Crucifixion before the end of the day on Friday, Nisan 14, the day of “the LORD’s Passover.” It does conflict, however, with the sabbatarian understanding that Nisan 15 was on Thursday, April 6 in 30 AD. [Addendum, 8/12/2018: Justin Martyr, in chapter 67 of his First Apology (ca. AD 155-157), wrote: "For He was crucified on the day before that of Saturn; and on the day after that of Saturn, which is the day of the Sun, having appeared to His apostles and disciples..." (emphasis added). This is confirmation that at a very early date, the Church recognized the Roman "day of Saturn," i.e. Saturday, as the day that immediately followed the day of the Crucifixion. It also confirms that Sunday was the "third day" when the risen Lord appeared to His disciples. This is further solid historical evidence against any claims the Crucifixion took place on a Wednesday. Only a Friday crucifixion fits with what Justin Martyr wrote.] Conclusions It is time to wrap this up. We have seen that Old Testament passages about the Passover shed tremendous light on understanding otherwise confusing mentions of it in the Gospels. The Bible is truly a book that explains itself, a sure sign of the hand of God superintending over its writing that covered centuries. There are no conflicts between any of the Gospel accounts of the Crucifixion week, and the timeline of events taking place on Nisan 14 in particular is quite clear when the Old Testament passages cited are allowed to guide how we interpret things. Despite this edification, however, I must confess some disappointment. I had entered into this study with the expectation that all researchers would work from a common calendar, and in my search for a calendar for 30 AD I settled upon one offered by the website http://www.cgsf.org/. Only after I had done a considerable amount of work did I realize, in a state of shock, that the calendars used there did not match up with those used for 30 AD by most of the evangelical world! The Church of God website gives the Passover of 30 AD on Wednesday, April 5. In contrast, the usual scholarly sources in the evangelical world uniformly place the Passover of 30 AD on Friday, April 7. This difference in calendars has a tremendous impact on the research done so far. I had hoped to be able to show, from Scripture alone, that April 3, 33 AD was the only viable option for the date of the Crucifixion, because having the high Sabbath of the Passover week coincide with the regular Sabbath on Saturday that year makes everything “click.”  If Nisan 14 in 30 AD corresponded with April 5, taking account of inclusive dating would rule that year out, leaving April 3, 33 AD as the only viable choice. Now, however, I am a bit wiser, if not much closer to my goal. When Nisan 14 of 30 AD is assigned not to April 5 but to April 7, we also have a combined high/regular Sabbath day on Saturday, April 8. Most of the arguments covered in this study that favor April 3, 33 AD thus apply equally well to April 7, 30 AD. The only real difference that I can see at this time is the impact of the lunar eclipse argument of Humphreys and Waddington. It would seem to rule out 30 AD as a possible Crucifixion date if it was strong. However, I am satisfied from my study so far that it is a weak argument that gives us no firm basis for choosing 33 AD over 30 AD for the Crucifixion. I wish it did, but in the face of the research by Schaefer I am not prepared to accept it. So, the work continues in search of a better basis for making a choice between those two years. I am actually rather pleased that I can still view 30 AD as a candidate for the Crucifiixion date, because it works much better with other conclusions that have come out of my eschatology research! But that is a story for another day. (This article was slightly revised March 31, 2018.) Share Subscribe Get the Free Monthly ABR Newsletter » The lastest Biblical archaeology news, creation/evolution issues, book reviews, resources, and current ABR activities. We need your support! Our ministry relies on the generosity of people like you, who make it possible for us to develop and publish great articles. If you enjoyed this article, please consider supporting ABR with a small donation or by becoming a member. Please support ABR!       HomeResearchCurrent Events​Outreach​Publications​Support ABR​Bookstore​About​FAQ​Contact​Sitemap Browse Associates for Biblical Research Articles Book Reviews Conquest of Canaan Contemporary Issues Devotionals Divided Kingdom Exodus from Egypt Flood Founder's Corner General Apologetics Investigating Origins Judges-United Monarchy Ministry Updates New Testament Era Patriarchal Era Videos/Audio Associates for Biblical Research PO Box 144, Akron, PA 17501 Phone: +1 717-859-3443 Toll Free: 1-800-430-0008 abr@biblearchaeology.org © 2013 Associates for Biblical Research. All rights reserved. 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Messianic Passover Teachings and Events-14-16 Aviv 5779

Beth Immanuel Messianic Synagogue 828 3RD ST, HUDSON WI SERVICES SATURDAY 10:00 AM Messianic Passover Teachings and Events HOME » NEWS » EVENTS Passover is a beautiful festival of redemption instructed in the Bible, celebrated by the ancient followers of Yeshua, and preserved by the Jewish community for centuries. Passover (in Hebrew, Pesach) not only commemorates the exodus from Egypt, it anticipates and celebrates the ultimate Messianic redemption. For Messianic Jews and Gentiles, Passover is also an important time to commemorate the death, burial, and resurrection of our Master Yeshua, which also occurred at this season. We celebrate Passover by removing all traces of leaven from our homes, by participating in a special meal called a seder, and by singing songs, blessings, and prayers of praise. On this page, you'll find: Messianic Passover events at Beth Immanuel Messianic audio teachings about Passover Articles and Bible studies about Passover from a Messianic Jewish perspective Additional Passover-related resources  a_guide_to_passover_at_beth_immanuel_2019.pdf omer_count_2019_1.pdf Audio Teachings about Passover Passover the Seed of Abraham RECORDED 04/24/2010 Number 17 in the series Galatians How long were the children of Israel in Egypt? Was it 430years? If so, how do we account for 430 years over only three generations? In Galatians 3, Paul employs a rabbinic tradition about the duration of Israel's sojourn in Egypt, interprets the "seed of Abraham" as a reference to Messiah, and compares the Torah to a competing inheritance document. play stop 00:00 00:00 17_passover_and_the_seed_of_abraham.mp3 Tales of the Resurrection RECORDED 04/23/2011 Number 8 in the series Death of the Messiah Stories from the Gospels about Yeshua's resurrection. Enjoy this holiday teaching from Shabbat Chol HaMo'ed Pesach Nisan 19, 5771. play stop 00:00 00:00 tales_of_the_resurrection.mp3 Plagues of Egypt RECORDED 04/22/2016 Number 17 in the series Apocalypse of John The plagues on Egypt foreshadow a future coming time of tribulation when God will judge the whole earth, as he once judged Egypt. This time, judgment comes on all the nations, as God redeems his people from the nations. Just as the redemption from Egypt began with plagues, judgments, signs and wonders on the earth, likewise, the final redemption will be prefaced by the same types of omens, calamities, and judgments, which Christians refer to as “the tribulation” and Jews refer to as the “Birth Pains of Messiah,” leading up to the conflict of Armageddon, the great war of Gog and Magog. play stop 00:00 00:00 the_plagues_of_egypt.mp3 Bread of Immortality RECORDED 03/28/2015 It's common in the Messianic Jewish movement to state that the leaven which must be cast out at Passover symbolizes sin, but a closer look at the New Testament indicates a different symbolism at work. This teaching considers the spiritual significance of chametz (leaven) and matzah (unleavened bread) in connection with the festival of Passover.  play stop 00:00 00:00 bread_of_immortaliy.mp3 Seder in Jerusalem RECORDED 03/24/2012 Number 3 in the series Death of the Messiah The story of the Last Supper compared with the traditional elements of the Seder meal as reported in the Mishnah help us recreate the story of Yeshua's last meal with his disciples before he suffered. Listen to this teaching to help prepare to keep the Seder in memory of the Master as he instructed us. play stop 00:00 00:00 last_seder.mp3 Blood on the Doorposts RECORDED 03/04/2012 Number 6 in the series Death of the Messiah What does the death of the Messiah mean to you? What does it accomplish for us? This teaching takes a serious look into the meaning of Passover and being born again through Yeshua. play stop 00:00 00:00 blood_on_the_doorposts.mp3 He Asked for Life RECORDED 04/19/2014 Number 7 in the series Death of the Messiah The resurrection of Yeshua is foretold in the Psalms. Just as Psalm 22 prophetically foreshdaowed his crucifixion, opening with the words, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me," likewise Psalm 21 pertains to his ressurection. This short teaching from Beth Immanuel's 2014 Resurrection Service offers insights into the significance of our Master's resurrection.   play stop 00:00 00:00 he_asked_for_life.mp3 Easter or Passover? RECORDED 03/29/2016 Number 4 in the series Death of the Messiah When did the disciples of Yeshua begin celebrating the festival of Easter? What's wrong with Easter? Why do Messianic people and Hebrew Roots people regard Easter as the equivalent of a Satanic holiday? This teaching dispels misinformation and junk scholarship about the origin of Easter while telling the story of the transformation from Passover to Easter. play stop 00:00 00:00 easter_or_passover.mp3 Last Supper or Last Seder? RECORDED 04/12/2014 Number 2 in the series Death of the Messiah Was Jesus’ Last Supper a Passover Seder? On what day did Yeshua die, and did he celebrate a Passover Seder with his disciples or not? Yeshua died on a Friday, but what day of the month was it? And by “day of the month,” I mean, on what day of the biblical calendar did He die? Was it the thirteenth day of Nissan, the fourteenth day of Nissan, or the fifteenth day of Nissan? play stop 00:00 00:00 last_seder_or_last_supper.mp3 Sign of Jonah RECORDED 04/05/2014 Number 1 in the series Death of the Messiah Yeshua told his generation that no sign would be given it except "the sign of Jonah." What was the sign of Jonah? Does the sign of Jonah prove that Yeshua was in the grave for three days and three nights? If Yeshua was in the grave three days and three nights, how could he have died on a Friday and been raised on a Sunday? Does Matthew 12:40 imply that Jesus did not die on a Friday? On what day of the week did Jesus die? play stop 00:00 00:00 sign_of_jonah.mp3 The Real Tomb of Jesus RECORDED 04/26/2014 Number 5 in the series Death of the Messiah Has the real tomb of Jesus been discovered? Two contending locations in Jerusalem both claim to preserve the location of Golgotha and the tomb of the Master. Which one is the authentic site? Join us on a search for the historical tomb of Jesus. play stop 00:00 00:00 The Real Tomb of Jesus Articles about Passover Passover Overview Passover is not just one night! Learn about the full Passover schedule: the "Great Sabbath," the removal of leaven, seder night, the week of unleavened bread, the counting of the omer, and the special last day of Passover. Learn more Hosting a Seder So you’ve decided to do a Passover seder meal! Good. The celebration of the Passover with unleavened bread and bitter herbs is a commandment. Even more, it is a commandment of the Master to do this in remembrance of Him! You are preparing to keep one of the Master’s most sacred instructions to his disciples! God will bless you as you keep his Torah and His son’s command. May the Lord bless your home. Learn more Leaven and Passover Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the first day you shall remove leaven out of your houses, for if anyone eats what is leavened, from the first day until the seventh day, that person shall be cut off from Israel. (Exodus 12:15) Learn more Last Supper or Last Seder? Was Jesus’ Last Supper a Passover Seder? On what day did Yeshua die, and did he celebrate a Passover Seder with his disciples or not? Yeshua died on a Friday, but what day of the month was it? And by “day of the month,” I mean, on what day of the biblical calendar did He die? Was it the thirteenth day of Nissan, the fourteenth day of Nissan, or the fifteenth day of Nissan? Learn more A Pass-Ova Mystery The primary function of the Passover Seder is to tell the story of the exodus to one’s children. The booklet that we read during the seder is called the Haggadah, which means “telling.” As it says, “You shall tell your son on that day, ‘It is because of what the LORD did for me when I came out of Egypt’” (Exodus 13:8). Learn more Gentiles and Passover Is it permissible for a Gentile to eat a Passover Seder meal? The Torah does warn, "A sojourner or a hired servant shall not eat of it" (Exodus 12:45), and it also says, "No uncircumcised person may eat of it" (Exodus 12:48). Learn more The Sign of Jonah Does Matthew 12:40 imply that Jesus did not die on a Friday? On what day of the week did Jesus die? Learn more Last Seder: A Jewish Reading of the Last Supper On the night before he suffered, Jesus ate a “last supper” with his disciples. At that meal, he gave them bread and wine and told them to take the bread and wine in remembrance of him. Thanks to increasing levels of education in the Jewish roots of Christianity, most Christians today realize that the Last Supper of Jesus and his disciples was a traditional Jewish Passover Seder meal, but most Christians probably still do not realize exactly how the Last Supper conforms to a traditional seder meal. Learn more Counting the Omer The command to bring the first sheaf of the harvest to the Temple is of great significance to the disciples of Yeshua. It is an obscure appointment on the Biblical calendar, sometimes called the First Fruits of the Barley Harvest, but better known simply by its Biblical name, “The Omer.” The Omer is a minor festival with major Messianic implications. Learn more Passover: Prelude on the Mountain More than three years had passed since Yeshua of Nazareth, the rabbi from Galilee, began to travel and teach about the imminent appearance of the Kingdom of Heaven. His message of repentance, faith in him, and charity to the downtrodden did not sit well with the political and religious figures he encountered. The Sadducees feared his messianic proclamations would gain strength and cause Rome to marshall its soldiers and place Judaea under even stricter control than the status quo. Learn more Passover Related Resources VISIT OUR MESSIANIC SYNAGOGUE Guide for New Visitors Beth Immanuel is a friendly and welcoming community. Click here to learn what to expect when you visit. About Us, Common Questions, Synagogue Etiquette Synagogue Services Join us as we enthrone the God of Israel with praise and uplift the name of Yeshua the Messiah! 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Latest, Schedule, Book of Ruth, Parashah THIS WEEK Today is 16 Nisan 5779 Parashat Shemini Shel Pesach Deuteronomy 14:22-16:17 Isaiah 10:32-12:6 Shabbat in Hudson Light candles: 7:57 pm Shabbat ends: 9:05 pm CONNECTIONS First Fruits of Zion Messianic Jewish teaching for Christians and Jews Torah Portions Torah Club Vine of David Acts for Messiah Orphanage in Uganda UMJC POPULAR STUDY TOPICS Torah Jeremiah Revelation Parashah Hebrew Passover The Three Weeks Temple Tisha B'av fasting Destruction of the Temple apocalypse FOLLOW US Stay in the loop! Get our free e-newsletter! Breeze Login 828 3RD STREET, HUDSON, WI 54016 SITEMAP PRIVACY POLICY SEARCH THIS SITE GENIZAH DAILY STUDY COPYRIGHT © 2014 BETH IMMANUEL. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Saturday, April 20, 2019

Counting Omer while Pesakh Shameag 14-16 Aviv 5779

Introduction

“When you take this people out of Egypt,” said G‑d to Moses when He revealed Himself to him in a burning bush at the foot of Mount Sinai, “you shall serve G‑d on this mountain.”

It took seven weeks to reach the mountain. The people of Israel departed Egypt on the 15th of Nissan (the first day of Passover); on the 6th of Sivan, celebrated ever since as the festival of Shavuot, they assembled at the foot of Mount Sinai and received the Torah from G‑d.

The Kabbalists explain that the 49 days that connect Passover with Shavuot correspond to the 49 drives and traits of the human heart. Each day saw the refinement of one of these sefirot, bringing the people of Israel one step closer to their election as G‑d’s chosen people and their receiving of His communication to humanity.

Each year, we retrace this inner journey with our “Counting of the Omer.” Beginning on the second night of Passover, we count the days and weeks: “Today is one day to the Omer”; “Today is two days to the Omer”; “Today is seven days, which are one week to the Omer”; and so on, till “Today is forty-nine days, which are seven weeks to the Omer.” Shavuot, the “Festival of Weeks,” is the product of this count, driven by the miracles and revelations of the Exodus but achieved by a methodical, 49-step process of self-refinement within the human soul.

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Ragi

Daftar Isi: KECIL: Ragi ; PEDOMAN: Ragi ; GLOSARI AYT: Ragi ; BROWNING: RAGI ; ENSIKLOPEDIA: RAGI ; LAMBANG: Ragi , Tidak Beragi ; YUNANI: 2219 ζυμη zume ; STATISTIK: RAGI ; LAIN: Dalam Versi-Versi Alkitab ; Ragi Ragi: segumpal adonan yang sudah agak lama dalam keadaan khamir, dengan maksud untuk meragikan gumpalan yang besar yang sudah tersedia. Ragi dilarang disimpan dalam rumah selama masa raya Paskah dan dilarang pula untuk dipakai dalam segala korban persembahan kepada Tuhan, mungkin karena dalam iklim yang panas gumpalan (ragi) yang disimpan itu untuk maksud-maksud, tertentu tidak bersih; mengkiaskan pengajaran busuk. Matius 16:6; 1Korintus 5:7 (Kamus Gering) Ke atas Ragi [Kamus Kecil] BIS- Bahan yang dipakai dalam adonan roti atau kue untuk mengkhamirkan atau mengembangkan adonan itu. Ke atas Ragi [Kamus Pedoman] 1. Digunakan untuk membuat roti. Hos 7:4 2. Bersifat mengembang. 1Kor 5:6 3. Dilarang: 3.1 Selama hari raya Paskah. Kel 12:15-20 3.2 Dipersembahkan dengan darah. Kel 34:25 3.3 Dipersembahkan dengan korban sajian. Im 2:11; 10:12 3.4 Digunakan bersama dengan korban syukur. Im 7:13; Am 4:5 3.5 Hasil gandum pertama dipersembahkan dengan - . Im 23:17 4. Melukiskan: 4.1 Cepatnya penyebaran Injil. Mat 13:33; Luk 13:21 4.2 Pengajaran orang Farisi. Mat 16:6,12 4.3 Orang yang mengaku Kristen, tetapi tidak beribadah. 1Kor 5:6,7 4.4 Guru-guru palsu. Gal 5:8,9 4.5 Niat jahat atau kejahatan. 1Kor 5:8 Ke atas Ragi [Glosari AYT] Zat yang digunakan dalam pengolahan bahan makanan yang menyebabkan fermentasi. Secara kiasan, ragi dipakai untuk menggambarkan sesuatu yang kecil atau tidak terlihat tetapi memiliki pengaruh yang besar. Ke atas RAGI [Kamus Browning] Adonan ragi. Dalam --> Alkitab ragi mempunyai dua arti yang saling bertentangan. Sebagai adonan khamir yang tersisa dari gumpalan adonan yang terpakai, biasanya dicampurkan pada tepung untuk mengkhamirkannya lebih lanjut lagi. Oleh karena itu, adonan ragi itu dapat dipandang sebagai sesuatu yang hidup yang tidak boleh ikut dibakar dengan --> korban bakaran di atas --> mezbah. Atau adonan ragi itu dipandang memiliki pengaruh merusak yang menyebabkan pembusukan. Para --> rabi Yahudi terutama mempunyai pengertian terakhir ini. Ragi melambangkan perusakan wujud manusia. Demikianlah Yesus mengutuk ragi orang --> Farisi dan lain-lain (Mrk. 8:15) dan begitu pula Paulus mencela kecongkakan orang --> Korintus (1Kor. 5:6-8) dan tipu muslihat lawan-lawannya di --> Galatia (Gal. 5:9). Pada lain pihak, ragi sebagai pemberi hidup digunakan pada --> perumpamaan tentang ragi dalam Mat. 13:33 dan Luk. 13:20-21.Pada perayaan Roti tidak Beragi yang digabungkan dengan perayaan --> Paskah, orang Yahudi hanya makan roti yang tidak beragi (Kel. 13:7-8). Ke atas RAGI [Ensiklopedia] (se'or, 'ragi', 'roti beragi' di Ul 16:4; hamesy, 'sesuatu yg diragikan', bnd masysya, 'tanpa ragi', Im 10:12; Yunani zume). Dalam kehidupan orang Ibrani ragi memainkan peranan penting, tidak hanya dalam pembuatan roti, tapi juga di bidang hukum, upacara dan agama. Ragi dibuat dari dedak halus putih di remas dengan bibit ragi, dari tepung tumbuhan seperti kacang polong, atau dari jelai dicampur air yg tinggal diam hingga menjadi asam. Karena cara membuat roti makin maju, ragi dibuat dari tepung roti di remas tanpa garam, disimpan sampai timbul peragian. a. Dalam pembuatan roti Dalam pembuatan roti, ragi mungkin segumpal adonan terambil dari adonan terdahulu, dibiarkan beragi menjadi asam. Ini larut dalam air di tempat meremas sebelum tepung gandum dimasukkan, atau dicampur dengan tepung (Mat 13:33) dan di remas bersamanya. Roti yang dibuat dengan cara itu disebut roti beragi, dibedakan dari roti tidak beragi (Kel 12:15, dst). --> ROTI. Tidak jelas apakah ragi jenis lain dipakai, walaupun sering dikatakan bahwa orang Yahudi menggunakan endapan anggur sebagai ragi. b. Dalam hukum dan upacara agama Peraturan Musa (Kel 23:18; 34:2) melarang pemakaian ragi selama --> Paskah dan hari raya Roti Tidak Beragi (Yunani azumos) (Kel 23:15; Mat 26:17, dst). Hal ini mengingatkan Israel tentang keberangkatan buru-buru dari Mesir, tatkala tidak ada waktu untuk memanggang roti beragi. Mereka membawa adonan dan tempat meremas tepung dan memanggang roti sambil berkelana (Kel 12:34 dst; Ul 16:3 dst). Orang Bedouin modern masih berbuat demikian. Larangan memakai ragi dan madu (Im 2:11), mungkin dibuat karena peragian melibatkan penghancuran dan pembusukan, dan bagi Israel keadaan membusuk menimbulkan kesan kenajisan. Para penulis rabi sering menggunakan ragi sebagai lambang kejahatan dan kebusukan manusia turun temurun (bnd Kel 12:8, 15-20). Plutarkhus mengulangi pendapat kuno ini tatkala menggambarkan ragi sebagai 'benih kebusukan yg membusukkan adonan yg dicampurinya'. Istilah fermentum digunakan Persius (Sat. 1:24) untuk 'kebusukan'. Mungkin dengan alasan ini pula ragi tidak dipakai dalam korban di mezbah Yahweh; yg diizinkan hanya roti dibuat dari tepung tanpa ragi (masysyot, Im 10:12). Ada dua kekecualian terhadap peraturan ini (Im 7:13; bnd Am 4:5). Roti bundar beragi menyertai korban syukur, roti batangan beragi dipersembahkan sebagai persembahan unjukan pada Hari Raya Pentakosta. c. Dalam ajaran keagamaan Dalam PB ragi dipakai dengan arti kiasan yg mencerminkan pendapat lama tentang 'busuk dan menimbulkan kebusukan'. Yesus memperingatkan murid mengenai ragi orang Farisi, Saduki dan Herodes (Mat 16:6; Mrk 8:15). MaksudNya, kemunafikan Farisi dan pemahaman yg berlebihan akan yg lahiriah (Mat 23:14, 16; Luk 12:1), skeptisisme dan ketidaktahuan Saduki (Mat 22:23, 29), kebencian dan tipu daya politik Herodes (Mat 22:16-21; Mrk 3:6). Pengertian yang sama terdapat dalam 1 Kor 5:6 dst dan Gal 5:9. Yg pertama menonjolkan pertentangan antara 'ragi keburukan dan kejahatan' dengan 'roti yg tak beragi kemurnian dan kebenaran', tapi mengingat arti baru dari pesta lama yaitu bahwa 'Kristus, Paskah kita telah dipersembahkan bagi kita'. Tapi maksud ragi lain dalam perumpamaan Yesus yg membandingkan Kerajaan Allah dengan 'ragi yg diambil seorang wanita, dan diadukkan ke dalam tepung terigu tiga sukat sampai khamir seluruhnya' (Mat 13:33; Luk 13:21). Perumpamaan ini mengikuti perumpamaan biji sesawi kecil dan lambat tumbuhnya. Makna dari perumpamaan ragi menunjuk pada 'pengaruh ragi dalam tepung, tersembunyi, diam-diam, penuh rahasia tapi mempengaruhi seluruhnya secara merata' (ISBE, 3, hlm 1862). KEPUSTAKAAN. ISBE; J Lightfoot, Horse Hebraicae, 1659, 2, hlm 232-233; O. T Allis, 'The Parable of the Leaven', EQ 19, 1947, hlm 254-273; R. S Wallace, Many Things in Parables, 1955, hlm 22-25; H Windisch, TDNT 2, hlm 902-906; G. T. D Angel, NIDNTT 2, hlm 461-463. JDD/SS Ke atas Ragi [Kamus Lambang] LAMBANG pengaruh doktrin, ajaran atau perilaku. Umumnya mengacu pada dampak negatif ajaran-ajaran sesat, tapi kadang-kadang juga untuk dampak positif Injil, seperti dalam Mat 13:33 dan Luk 13:21. Kel 12:15-39; 13:3, 7; Im 2:11; 6:17; 10:12; 23:17; Hos 7:4; Am 4:5; Mat 13:33; 16:6, 11, 12; Mrk 8:15; Luk 12:2; 13:21; 1 Kor 5:6, 7; Gal 5:9. Lihat juga TIDAK BERAGI. Ke atas Tidak Beragi [Kamus Lambang] LAMBANG kekudusan, yakni mereka yang melindungi dirinya sehingga bebas dari pengaruh ajaran-ajaran sesat dan hal-hal buruk. Hari Raya Paskah juga disebut Hari Raya Roti Tidak Beragi. Dalam arti ini, roti tidak beragi menggambarkan kemanusiaan Kristus yang tidak berdosa. Kel 12:20; 13:7; Ul 16:3-16; 1 Kor 5:7, 8. Ke atas Yunani Strongs #2219 ζυμη zume ζυμη zumh: ragi (Kamus Yoppi) ης [feminin] ragi (Kamus Barclay) Ke atas Ragi [Statistik] Jumlah dalam TB : 20 dalam 18 ayat (dalam OT : 7 dalam 7 ayat) (dalam NT : 13 dalam 11 ayat) Strong dalam PL : [<02556> חמץ ‎1x] [<02557> חמץ ‎1x] [<07603> שאר ‎5x] Strong dalam PB : [<2219> ζυμη ‎13x] Ke atas Dalam Versi-Versi Alkitab: Ragi: BIS TB

Monday, April 15, 2019

Roti Tidak Beragi

Daftar Isi: KECIL: Hari Raya Roti Yang Tidak Beragi , Roti yang Tidak Beragi ; HAAG: Roti Tak Beragi ; BROWNING: ROTI SAJIAN ATAU ROTI TAK BERAGI , ROTI TIDAK BERAGI ; Hari Raya Roti Tidak Beragi Ke atas Hari Raya Roti Yang Tidak Beragi [Kamus Kecil] TB- Perayaan selama tujuh hari sehabis Paskah, di mana roti dibakar tanpa memakai ragi sebagai peringatan akan malam pembebasan orang Ibrani dari perbudakannya di Mesir (Kel 12:14-20, bandingkan Mat 26:17). BIS- Perayaan ini berlangsung tujuh hari lamanya sesudah Hari Raya Paskah. Hari ini dirayakan juga sebagai peringatan akan pembebasan orang Ibrani dari perbudakan di Mesir. Pada perayaan ini roti dibuat tanpa memakai ragi (Kel 12:14-20), itu sebabnya hari raya ini bernama Hari Raya Roti Tidak Beragi. Perayaan ini jatuh pada tanggal 15-20 bulan Nisan, yaitu waktu yang berdekatan dengan minggu pertama dalam bulan April. Ke atas Roti Yang Tidak Beragi [Kamus Kecil] KS.- Lihat --> Hari Raya --> 20093 Ke atas Roti Tak Beragi [Kamus Haag] Roti Tak Beragi. Lempengan bunder roti yang tipis dan tidak diberi ragi. Roti itu digunakan pada kesempatan mendadak (Kej 18:6; 19:3), dalam saat panen (Yos 5:11; Rut 2:14), dalam kurban (Im 23:18; Im 2:4,11 dbtl.), sebagai roti unjukkan dan digunakan selama tujuh hari pada perayaan roti tak beragi (Kel 12:15-20; 23:15; Ul 16:1-8). Di dalam Kel 23:15 hari raya Roti tak beragi adalah hari raya pertama dari ketiga perayaan utama, yang mewajibkan setiap orang Isr. menampakkan diri di depan Yahwe (bdk.: Kel 34:23; Ul 16:16). Seperti kedua pesta lainnya (: pesta panen dan pesta pengumpulan hasil), maka pesta pertama inipun rupanya termasuk dalam bilangan perayaan panen. Pada mulanya boleh dikatakan, bahwa pesta ini merupakan perayaan panen jelai yang pertama. Bangsa Isr. mengambil-alih perayaan ini dari bangsa Kanaan. Di kemudian harinya pesta ini diberi kerangka sejarah dan dihubungkan dengan -- pesta Paskah. -- Roti yang dipakai dalam ibadat harus tanpa ragi, sebab orang memandang ragi sebagai gejala kebusukan. Oleh karena itu di dalam arti kiasan ragi berarti: pengaruh yang buruk (Mat 16:6,12 dsj.) atau keburukan dari kepercayaan kafir (1Kor 5:7-8). Ke atas ROTI SAJIAN ATAU ROTI TAK BERAGI [Kamus Browning] Dalam PL ada petunjuk (Im. 24:5-9) bagi --> dua belas Roti Tak Beragi yang harus ditempatkan di Bait Suci sebagai sajian kepada Tuhan. Pada hari --> Sabat para imam memperbarui roti-roti itu dan memakan roti yang lama. --> Daud, dalam keadaan terpaksa, makan dari roti itu di --> Nob (1Sam. 21:4-6); suatu kejadian yang diangkat oleh Yesus untuk membela suatu pelanggaran hari --> Sabat oleh *murid-murid-Nya (Mat. 12:3-4). Ke atas ROTI TIDAK BERAGI [Kamus Browning] Roti yang dibuat tanpa menggunakan ragi dan dipesan untuk persembahan dari gandum dalam Bait Allah (Im. 2:4, 11). Teorinya ialah bahwa proses fermentasi oleh ragi itu adalah semacam perusakan dari kondisi semula yang murni (1Kor. 5:8). Selama pesta roti tak beragi pada awal masa panen, hanya roti yang tidak beragilah yang dimakan. Adat kebiasaan ini dicangkokkan pada sejarah Israel khususnya masa --> keluaran dari --> Mesir yang menurut tradisi terjadi dengan sangat terburuburu, sehingga para perempuan tidak berkesempatan menunggu sehingga adonan roti itu menguak (Kel. 12: 14-20). Dengan demikian, maka peringatan roti tak beragi dan --> Paskah menjadi satu pesta peringatan.